by Kris@WLP » Tue Mar 25, 2014 12:18 pm
Answers:
If you have a friend who's able to be at the convention with you and willing to watch your table for free (aside from admission and lodging), good. Most vendors with any choice have at least two people for the very problems you list.
But let's presume it's going to be just you, or you plus a hired assistant.
First and foremost: remember that THIS IS WORK. THIS IS MEANT TO MAKE A PROFIT.
Hiring an assistant is tricky. If your assistant would not come to the event except to oblige you, then admission, food and lodging isn't sufficient. Given the amount of time taken out of the person's life for your benefit, the absolute least you should pay the assistant is $100 for one day or $200 for the whole weekend PLUS food and lodging. Considering that a convention workday will run at LEAST ten hours, and longer in artist's alley setups, this is at or slightly below minimum wage if your assistant were working hourly. If this amount doesn't fit into your financial scheme, then you can't afford an assistant.
If you do get a friend to help you on the cheap, you both need to get together and work out a schedule. Your free-labor friend is almost certainly coming to see the convention, which means they will have panels, events, etc. they want to catch. Discuss them as soon as you can get a con schedule in hand. Be damn clear about when you do and don't expect each other to be at the booth. You, however, should limit your time away from the booth as much as possible... because one of the main points of having a booth is so that people can come and find YOU, not your assistant.
As for leaving your table when you don't have a helper: DON'T. If you absolutely cannot put off a potty break, ask a neighboring vendor to watch your booth while you make the quickest run you can; most other vendors will oblige as much as they can. It's not difficult to sneak some small snacks past even the most rigid "no outside food" venues if you plan ahead, but as a general rule this will make the potty issue worse. If you can stand it, the best plan is to eat a very large breakfast of some kind and a decent dinner after you close for the day. Aside from emergencies, NEVER get out of line-of-sight of your booth, and preferably stay in it if there's even the slightest chance of a customer coming along to browse.
THIS IS IMPORTANT- DO NOT OVER-SKIMP ON FOOD. Ramen noodles will NOT suffice. You're going to be putting in long hours on short sleep among a lot of people who showed up sick as a dog rather than give up the hundreds of dollars they spent in advance for the event. Get at least one meal a day with actual VEGETABLES in. No, the dehydrated colorful flecks in a cup noodle don't count. Burgers with extra veggies are probably good enough, but if you're doing well go ahead and splurge on a sit-down meal at least once during the con.
GET SOME SLEEP. Know how much sleep you absolutely need to be able to function acceptably as a retailer, and GET it. This is doubly important for artist's alley, since you'll need to get up VERY early, especially on Saturday, to take advantage of the hour before dealer's room opens. If you skimp on decent food and sleep, then by Sunday you WILL have the con crud or some other disease.
Finally, as per your display: for an artist's alley display, it's best to keep any standing displays on the table on the back half of the table, so as not to block view of your neighbors. Behind-table displays like shelves, extra tables, banner stands, etc. are better. Aside from this, use every square inch of your assigned space... because if you don't, your neighbors WILL encroach. This is a little rude, but it's also common practice for con vendors. We're a bit like hermit crabs, in that we expand to occupy whatever space we can find.
BE WARNED that most artist's alley space is unsecured, which means you're going to have to pack up all your merchandise and anything else you don't want to risk being stolen or vandalized every night and set it back up every morning. Plan your displays accordingly; any AA displays should be either disposable, easy and quick to pack and transport, or either tough or pointless to mess with.